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Super Trader is Van Tharp's book. Since you are acquainted with SQN, I figured you would be familiar with the rest of Van Tharp's work.
You took my question 'Are you serious?' out of context. You asked if we should count slippage and commissions. To that specific question I asked 'Are you serious?'
Regarding system performance vs. trader performance, yes - they are completely different. And YES, even if you run a 'fully automated' strategy, they are still different!!! I'm sure you will enjoy the book as much as I did…
I've just been in the book's site ( Super Trader Book - Products by Van Tharp). It is a coaching book. Sure interesting but regarding specifically on the aspect that concerns us, in order to dissolve the plug quickly, would you be so kind to ilustrate me / us with a few ideas / formulas if there are?.
Reducing the issue at the most; suppose a trader operates (automatic or discretional) with consistent (high N) result of SQN = 5 (for example). Doesn't it defines his operational?, Why it can't be associated with the trader himself?. Is it possible to somehow this association?.
Of course you could score a system plus its operator with a kind of 'collective SQN', but that would defeat the whole purpose of using SQN to judge one system vs. another. If you include the trader, it becomes impossible to compare systems.
I know you think you have little to learn from Super Trader, but I recommend you buy it immediately. Besides position size, the *single most important metric* Van Tharp has found to success is error free trading. It's been a few years, but I believe he states that it's difficult for a trader to succeed with any system if he is unable to execute a minimum of 85% of his trades error free (sticking to your plan). What you pass off as 'coaching' ends up being the single biggest variable as well as opportunity for any trader. The book is much more than 'coaching', btw.
Let me give you an example of how this works. Consider two systems operated by two traders. System 1 is operated by trader 1 and system 2 by trader 2.
System 1 SQN 5
System 2 SQN 2
Trader 1 60% error free
Trader 2 95% error free
Guess who wins at the end of the quarter?
Do you see how looking at their respective quarterly results and calculating 'SQN' to compare the two trader/systems becomes meaningless?
The system must be evaluated separately from the trader to give it proper credit and the trader must be evaluated apart from his system in order to give him proper credit or perhaps discredit as the situation may be.
What I'm saying is that I believe you need to go back to the beginning and decide what your objective is: grade systems or traders. And… I guess I'm also saying that if you are only interested in grading systems you are missing out on the biggest obstacle to trading success. For this reason, Van Tharp uses two metrics: SQN and percent error free trading.
Now, if you tell someone your 'system' scores an SQN of 5 with 85% error free trading, that has much more meaning to the world. If someone has an SQN of 1.5 and they begin to scrutinize their trading behavior and realize they are skipping signals because of fear, moving stops, etc. and are only 50% error free, you may start wondering what their system would score like if it was traded by a pro who only goofs up 1 out of 20 trades (95% error free trading).
I hope this helps you form a more specific objective. Perhaps you may decide to stick to systems analysis for this thread and relegate error free trading and how best to quantify that to a separate thread.
I appreciate so much your explanations and considerations.
Of course I'm willing to return to the starting position, I think it's essential to go further and not get deadlocks or blows.
But still I have to digest something.
When you speak about "error free trading", I guess it is referred to a plan, the plan of the trader. So Trader 1 can have SQN 5 with poor adjust to the plan, and Trader 2; SQN 2, matching the plan at 95%.
OK. But that this implies we must expect better results from Trader 2... Yes, I need good chew it and digest it...
Supposing enough N, the deviation is taking into account a measurement of the errors, and by an absolute way so that it can be compared.
Am I right that the error free trading you mean is referred to the trader's plan?.
If I'm right, the plan of the trader is just a personal way of approaching to the markets. Better compliance of the plan just rises the probability that the trader will get similar results in the future, but that is independent of whether the results themselves are good (whether the plan leads to good absolute performance), and does not allow absolute comparisons.
I see this approach, typical of coaches; trader behaviour oriented. Perhaps a way to get much more people with the goals accomplished. There will be fewer people with the goals accomplished if the goals are absolute and comparison oriented (just a thought near to the off-topic).
The thread has not yet entered on how to compose various operationals of one trader, to get a single data. It's another issue.
And to have the position sizing as a metric; yes, I agree. I thought about it when I considered evaluate traders with a single data and by a comparative way. I think it's an alternative.
I would like to draw solid conclusions. Thank you again.
Yes, the 'plan' is indistinguishable from the 'system' that you desire to grade using Van Tharp's SQN… If you don't follow the 'system' how can you rate it's performance?
Exactly! 'Systems' are only as good as their operators (the trader).
That is a very large assumption I am not willing to join you in...
Yes. So perhaps another interesting thread would be how one breaks their system down into its parts and then determines after each trade if the rules were followed. If there are 20 steps and you break 2 rules, that's only 90% system integrity, etc.
See above. 'Plan'='system'.
What you casually refer to as 'behavior' is what? It's the whole thing! What else controls our trading besides our 'behavior'? Have you been trading a live account with real money? If you really had, I doubt you would trivialize a trader's 'behavior'.
Don't know what you mean by 'single data'…
Perhaps Wikmar you just run automated strategies and this is the reason I don't understand your comments well. You don't sound like someone who has watched the market for hours at a time waiting to push a button.
Consider "system (or plan) + trader" the unit to grade. Facing for example a ranking, it is irrelevant the degree of adaptation of the trader to his plan. It's his personal consideration for personal development. What is relevant to the ranking is the results of the trades, no more.
Generally speaking, for now I still think we can use SQN or something similar to grade systems, where systems could be any operational or a trader, because the grade is done from the results, no more inside. I'm not saying the inside is not important, but it is for the trader, not for an external, abosolute and objective grading (IMO).
Deviation is directly proportional to the number of failures, to the magnitude of the drawdowns, etc.
It's not just my assessment, you can see it in the related literature. This phrase is abundantly in Internet:
"The smaller the Std dev (P&L), the more regular are your results and the smaller are the drawdowns".
And even more so if we talk about the next step in the approach; not the std deviation but the "downside risk".
Was not my intention trivialize about trader's behavior. I just said I understand it is the usual whole goal of the coaches: make solid traders in their concentration and discipline to match the plan. As for any trader, it is very important for me, and perhaps for a hypothetical coach I would have, but not facing a grade of the results IMO.
I don't think is relevant, but attending your questions; I runned automated strategies with real money in Eurex (not recently, in this low volatility era) and discretionals (now, swing mostly, just sometimes a bit of scalping), in fact the example in #5 were my results in futures and indexes (CFDs) to some months ago (it's not up to date). It has no Money Management included although there was. The graph considers position = 1 every time. Also I trade CFDs Forex and CL.
Both have the same target pattern, but with different risk.
B is more profitable but it's obvious also has more variability of results.
Just looking at the graphs, we can think that A has more quality in terms of the negative part of the results (less variability, less deviation, less DD, etc).
So, will not miss us that applying SQN formula, we get:
(With european notation; "." as the thousands separator and "," as decimal separator.)
SQN(A) = 2,10
SQN(B) = 1,60
Moreover and by other way, we have to know that their expectancies (at this end point of the study interval) are resp.: 0,172 and 0,044.
So, for now, we could say that A is better than B.
At the time of completion this study (recently), they presented this returns:
Return(A, %) = 8,45
Return(B, %) = 13,34
These are instant returns. By the way, and I can speak from experience with them, one could conclude (now supported by the graphs) that when things goes bad, goes bad equally for both. And usually they are able to overcome the DDs and became profitables. In these latter situations, B gives more satisfaction...
So, in this conditions, I thought something was wrong with SQN. Also trying things with other funds I conclude the same; it seems something can be improved.
Perhaps we would want to weight the SQN based formula with something directly related to the return, and avoiding imbalances, also weighting with something relevant to the DDs.
Returns and MaxDD appears in first instance as a possible solution. We would have (with new name):
With this new expression, we have:
System Value (A) = 0,2662
System Value (B) = 0,3144
This result looks better ; B better than A after all said (DDs are not so different, but the return is better for B much larger than the DD is worse).
But
this expression has two drawbacks IMO:
* Returns are instantaneous results. They could varies over time hiding a longer term profile, so it would be better something more careful with the longer term returns profile.
* Max DD has some drawbacks for calculation, mainly because when starting running a system, it needs some time to abandon DDs proportionally absurd (all you know). And to avoid this, it needs human considerations because very different views in each case and this makes it very difficult a pure algorithmic treatment (something very important).
So, what can we have better?.
Let's replace the instantaneous return by the slope of the straight line fitting the equity curve.
Also let's replace the Max DD by the area covered by the DD curve. But, as slope is a 1-dimensional magnitude and an area is 2-dimensional, let's involve it in a square root.
And also, inspired by the idea of Sortino ratio, as we are primarily interested in the uncertainty at the left of the average result more than at its right side, let's replace the standard deviation, by other, just considering the "downside risk".
Deviation at "left side":
Where r(sub)i is each result lower than the average, and NDown is the number of them over the total.
Now, with all of this, we have:
or rearranged (as preferred):
In our example, with standard deviation:
System Value (A) = 0,00011536
System Value (B) = 0,00017881
And with downside risk:
System Value (A) = 0,00011133
System Value (B) = 0,00017842
Not so different in this case but could it be cases with more relevant approach.
The following is to do an extensive use of the formula and subject it to criticism (expected to be useful btw). All feedback will be appreciated.
The first possible improvement could be a power factor ten (¿10e5?), to get more friendly values. But the use will say.
From my side it will be embeded in other project, that is to make a selector algorithm for selection of interesting investment funds, from a large database of asset values.
BTW, about the interesting discussion had with @forker. Other collegue exposed some thoughts, not in this forum, in order to distinguish between Inner Trading and Outer Trading.
IMO, it's curious and interesting to apply this distinction to us, to traders. And probably you'll find a curious and interesting variety of convergence / divergence between this two facets or aspects of traders; how about the plans (the development), and how about strict results.
Well, to apply ahead to this thread, to this search, to this attempt; I'm trying just about results (Outer Trading).